Monster Manual: Core Rulebook III (Dungeons & Dragons d20 3.5 Fantasy Roleplaying)
|
| Price: |
33 new or used available from $16.49
Average customer review:Product Description
Fearsome and formidable foes lurk within. Encounter a horde of monsters armed and ready to battle your boldest heroes or fight alongside them. The fully illustrated pages of this book are overrun with all the creatures, statistics, spells, and strategies you need to challenge the heroic characters of any Dungeons & Dragons roleplaying game.
Over 200 creeps, critters, and creatures keep players on their toes. From aboleths to zombies, the revised Monster Manual holds a diverse cast of enemies and allies essential for any Dungeons & Dragons campaign. There are hundreds of monsters ready for action, including many new creatures never seen before. The revised Monster Manual now contains an adjusted layout that makes monster statistics easier to understand and use. It has 31 new illustrations and a new index, and contains expanded information on monster classes and playing monsters as heroes, along with information on how to take full advantage of the tie-in D&D miniatures line planned for the fall of 2003 from Wizards of the Coast, Inc.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #36451 in Books
- Published on: 2003-07-18
- Released on: 2003-07-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 320 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780786928934
- Condition: USED - LIKE NEW
- Notes:
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Customer Reviews
An improvement, but with room for more improvement
I'm not going to talk about the controversy over the release of these books and will only be reviewing the information as it's written, and commenting on improvements or setbacks since the last edition.
The previous Monster Manual was a good guide to the basic monsters necessary for a DM to attempt to kill his PCs. The problem is, at that time the rules for 3rd edition were still fairly skeletal, and as time passed and rules were published enabling players and DMs alike to use monsters as PCs, these rules were not in the Monster Manual. Also, some terms were redefined, and even the manner in which the stats of a monster are to be determined changed. Adding to the confusion, the book was designed a little haphazardly, making it difficult to tell just where you're supposed to look for the information you need.
All these rules changes and additions have been incorporated into the new Monster Manual, and this book is now a complete, up-to-date, bound volume of WoTC's holy writ. The problem is, a lot of the organizational problems still exist or were expanded on.
The book boasts a few nice new illustrations, and they're more closely linked to the appropriate monster entry, but there are still some times where there'll be only a portion of a paragraph about a monster on the page that carries that monster's illustration.
Also, the templates have been shuffled in with all the monsters. I have no idea why they did this. There are monsters, and then there are templates to add to monsters. It makes perfect sense to separate the two. I must admit, though, making zombies and skeletons into templates, rather than monsters of dubious usefulness, was a great idea.
Some additions were simply wonderful, though. The "How to Create a Monster" section is welcome, laying out bare a lot of rules that were previously only available by cross-referencing several books. The short, italicized descriptions of every monster are a great template to drop into a dungeon encounter, or at least a starting point for a DM to get an image from.
On the whole, the Monster Manual is a useful tome, and a definite improvement on its predecessor. It still has a few flaws, however, which will no doubt be fixed in upcoming errata.
Greatest Monster Manual Ever!
I really like this version of the Monster Manual. Primarily because the monsters, my friends, have had the major upgrade they have always needed. Any monster, from the lowly kobold to the most powerful dragon, can become more powerful. You can create a 28th level goblin rogue, a 48 hit dice ogre barbarian, an enormous 30 hit dice dire bear, etc. Any monster can be upgraded to match the skill level of your campaign. Each monster is basically a template from which you begin. Party having a little too easy of a time with the orcs? Have a squad of 10, 4th level orc fighters run out of the cave. This book tells you how to upgrade all of the monsters.
Damage reduction has had a huge change. An iron golem, for example, has DR 15/adamantine. This means if you hit it with any weapon that is not adamantine (including a +5 Holy Avenger), you have to subtract 15 points from the damage before it affects the golem. This makes them many times more difficult to destroy. Monsters such as lycanthropes have DR 10/silver (only silver weapons do full damage. No more killing everything with your longsword +3).
In one of our adventures, our dungeonmaster had our 4th level party encounter a group of ogres. I was thinking, "easy fight." What I didn't know was that they were also 4th level barbarians. Our party barely survived, two party members died, and it was the greatest battle in the entire 25 years I have been playing D&D!
The game has shifted from an easy monster kill to more of a survival game, where any monster is a potentially lethal threat. It makes you pay a lot closer attention to the description as the DM reads it out to you. In a word, it has made the game exciting.
Now when an ancient red dragon comes charging out of its cave, you seriously consider having your 12th level barbarian run away at full speed, while hoping the rest of your party can keep it busy for a while (because you know there is no way your group can defeat it).
New And Very Improved
Out of the three re-released core D&D rulebooks, the Monster Manual has the most outstanding changes. The differences between the 3E and 3.5E versions are vast, and the changes made in 3.5E are almost all for the better.
Monster statistics now come equipped with base attack bonuses, grapple bonuses, and level adjustments (if you want to build your own monstrous character, either as a player or DM).
The book now includes rules and guidelines, both new and improved, for creating your own monsters, as well as increasing the power of those already provided. Monster skills and feats have been addressed in far greater detail, as well.
More importantly, the book includes both monsters from other books and new monsters, though the new monsters are often simply enhanced versions of older ones.
Lastly, the book includes a lot of new and very cool artwork.
The only thing that disappointed me was how they changed damage reduction. Enhancement bonuses to weapons are no longer relevant for purposes of damage reduction--now it has a lot more to do with the alignment of your weapon and what it's made out of. To me, this seems like an unnecessary change, one that makes it difficult to bring 3E monsters that feature damage reduction up to date with 3.5E.


